So, you don't get a scrollbar and the text is off the page? Or is the issue that you are already getting a scrollbar on the level with the least amount of text?

This only happens when I am in High Security Mode.
The scrollbar appears for a few seconds when I first switch to High Security Mode, then disappears. (I didn't see the scrollbar to start with, because I was in High Security Mode before I upgraded.)

What I see:

There is no visual indication that there is any extra text in the window that can be scrolled to.

There is a scrollbar, but on macOS, it is invisible until the user starts scrolling.
If a user just happens to start scrolling, then the final line becomes visible, but the first line is hidden.

The scrolling also makes it hard to tell exactly which lines apply to Low, Medium, and High.

This works for me using macOS 10.12.5 outside a VM (retina), but doesn't work inside a VM (non-retina).

I am running macOS 10.12.5 with Tor Browser 7.0.1 and Tor Button 1.9.7.4 in both environments.

I think it's better than it used to be, but there are still 2 lines of text missing at the bottom on non-retina. (And on retina, there are a few pixels still hidden at the bottom, which makes it possible to trigger the scroll bar.)

As an aside, Kathy and I don't know what the best approach is for using oniongit; maybe we should create a torbutton project under the tor-browser group and submit merge requests against it?

Dunno. I think for now just having a user repo there with an up-to-date master branch for merge requests and using the code review features Gitlab provides is the way to go. At least that's what I am currently doing. If there is something else/better I should set up and test I am all ears.

Of course, it's good to know that you commented. But don't you think that openness and clearness of the project suffer? Especially, because oniongit without JS does nothing, except loading CPU. What was the reason to move the discussion to oniongit?

Of course, it's good to know that you commented. But don't you think that openness and clearness of the project suffer? Especially, because oniongit without JS does nothing, except loading CPU. What was the reason to move the discussion to oniongit?